Family Law
Family Law News 2017, Issue 3, Volume 39, No. 3
Content
- Arbitration Clauses In Family Law Attorney Fee Agreement
- Family Law News Editorial Team
- Family Law Section Executive Committee
- Forensic Expert Testimony and the Value of the Side-by-Side
- Legislative Liaisons and Designated Recipients of Legislation
- Mandatory Fee Arbitration For Attorney-Mediators
- MCLE Article: What is a Paca?
- Message from the Chair
- Message from the Editor
- Military Family Support -Questions and Discovery
- Recurring Questions Under the Domestic Violence Prevention Act
- Requesting a Statement of Decision: How, When & Why
- Table of Contents
- Technology Corner: An Ode to a Modern Swiss Army Knife
- The Killing of Krempin
- Pension Survivor Rights Under Qdros: An Issue of Conflict of Laws
Pension Survivor Rights Under QDROs: An Issue of Conflict of Laws
George McCauslan
George W. McCauslan, FSA, MAAA, FCA, EA, is a consulting actuary who has been assisting family law attorneys with the valuation and division of retirement benefits for 40 years. Although he relocated to Tulsa, Oklahoma in 2012 after 36 years of practice in San Francisco, he continues to provide services to California family law attorneys, addressing issues related to retirement plan assets in dissolution actions. He has been a speaker for family law, actuarial and pension meetings on pension issues.
While it has long been settled law in California that each party in a dissolution action is entitled to one-half of the community interest in all assets, situations exist in which directly dividing an asset is either impossible or impractical. One of the most common of these situations is in connection with the division of the community interest in a defined benefit plan, which provides benefits in the form of a monthly income at retirement. The problem can exist for non-governmental plans that are controlled by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), which preempts state law with respect to such pension plans.
In this article, I will address the issues that may arise when dividing benefits from a defined benefit pension plan while the employee is still working. Similar issues that can arise in dividing benefits after retirement were addressed, at least in part, by the appellate court in In re Marriage of Cooper1.